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53
FZMw Jg. 6 (2003) S. 53-64
The Sound collector – The Prepared Piano of John Cage1
by Tim Ovens
–1–
In my lecture I would like to follow the way – John Cage's way through the world of
sounds, the way to the prepared piano and beyond. I want to show the determination
with which Cage ever more and more extended his sound collection, his musical
cosmos. Of course, the line of this development is not as even as I describe it here.
There are jumps and overlaps, which I do not mention in my lecture, in order to clarify
things a little. So please excuse my simplifications in the description of John Cage as a
sound collector.
–2–
'My favourite music is the music I haven't heard yet.'2 During his whole life Cage was
on the search for new sounds. Doing so, he did show an impressive inventiveness in his
way of composing. An inventiveness he possibly inherited from his father John Milton
Cage.
'My father was an inventor. He was able to find solutions for problems of various
kinds, in the fields of electrical engineering, medicine, submarine travel, seeing
through fog, and travel in space without the use of fuel. He told me if someone
says "can’ t" that shows you what to do.' 3
Maybe this is – I dare to say this – a typical American pragmatism, which John Cage
will show later again and again.
–3–
To understand Cage's lifelong interest in various sounds, let us first take a look at a little
story in Cages early life. Cage – at the age of eighteen years – had first begun to study
architecture in Paris. It soon became clear to him, that he did not want to devote his life
to architecture, as his teacher demanded.
1 This is a revised version of an article published in: Peter Rautmann and Nicolas Schalz (eds.),
Anarchische Harmonie - John Cage und die Zukunft der Künste, Bremen 2002, p. 141-149.2 David Revill, The Roaring Silence: John Cage, London 1992, p.14.3 John Cage, An Autobiographical Statement (1989), from
http://newalbion.com/artists/cagej/autobiog.html
54
'I left Paris and began both painting and writing music, first in Mallorca. The
music I wrote was composed in some mathematical way I no longer recall. It
didn’ t seem like music to me so that when I left Mallorca I left it behind to lighten
the weight of my baggage. In Sevilla on a street corner I noticed the multiplicity of
simultaneous visual and audible events all going together in one’s experience and
producing enjoyment. It was the beginning for me of theatre and circus.' 4
–4–
So we can see that already at this time the variety of most diverse sounds attracts him.
First of all, however, Cage returns to California and here he takes traditional
composition lessons. His first teacher is Richard Buhlig; afterwards he goes to Henry
Cowell. Cowell again recommends to him to take lessons with Arnold Schoenberg, who
at that time already lived in Los Angeles.
'When I asked Schoenberg to teach me, he said, "You probably can’ t effort my
price." I said, "Don’ t mention it; I don’ t have any money." He said, "Will you
devote your life to music?" This time I said "Yes." He said he would teach me free
of charge. I gave up painting and concentrated on music.'5
–5–
The first pieces of John Cage – for example the Two Pieces for Piano from 1935 –
clearly show the influence of Schoenberg, with their beginnings having traces of serial
composition techniques. The two composers' different views on art, however, soon
become unbridgeable:
'After two years it became clear to both of us that I had no feeling for harmony.
For Schoenberg, harmony was not just coloristic: it was structural. It was the
means one used to distinguish one part of a composition from another. Therefore
he said I’d never be able to write music. "Why not?" "You’ ll come to a wall and
won’ t be able to get through." "Then I’ ll spend my life knocking my head against
that wall."'6
Years later Schoenberg spoke about John Cage: 'Naturally he’s no composer, but rather
an inventor – an ingenious inventor.'7
4 Ibid.5 Ibid.6 Ibid.7 Ibid.
55
–6–
Thus Cage's composition studies came to their end. In the following years Cage gets by
with odd jobs beside his composition activities. In 1936 he becomes assistant to the film
producer Oscar Fischinger. Fischinger is at that time one of the most well-known and
most successful experimental film makers. Remarkable above all is the conversion of
music into cinematic motion by graphic structures and geometrical patterns.
'He happened to say one day, "Everything in the world has its own spirit which
can be released by setting it into vibration." I began hitting, rubbing everything,
listening, and then writing percussion music, and playing it with friends.'8
–7–
The percussion music John Cage wrote at that time was mainly music for dance;
because since 1937 Cage was employed by the Cornish School as a composer and
accompanist of a dance company. Here Cage invented the prepared piano – with his
piece Bacchanale.
'Before I left the Cornish School I made the prepared piano. I needed percussion
instruments for music for a dance that had an African character by Syvilla Fort.
But the theatre in which she was to dance had no wings and there was no pit.
There was only a small grand piano built in the front and left of the audience.
At the time I either wrote twelve-tone music for piano or I wrote percussion
music. There was no room for the instruments. I couldn’ t find an African twelve-
tone row. I finally realised I had to change the piano. I did so by placing objects
between the strings. The piano was transformed into a percussion orchestra
having the loudness, say, of a harpsichord.' 9
–8–
Cage already knew such experimentation with the sound of the piano from his teacher
Henry Cowell. In Cowells work Aolian Harp for example the player has to play on the
piano strings. The prepared piano also has a tradition in the American inventiveness,
which I mentioned at the beginning. As Cage said, American Bach societies, which
couldn’ t obtain 18th Century harpsichords, employed thumb tacks on the piano
hammers. Or he mentioned jazz pianists, who put newspapers on the strings.10
8 Ibid.9 Ibid.10 John Cage, text published in CD-booklet „Sonatas & Interludes“ played by Maro Ajemian, New
York 1995 Composers Recordings Inc., CD 700.
56
–9–
John Cage composed about 35 pieces for prepared piano between 1940 and 1954. Again
these are mainly works, which were written for dance. In the first pieces the preparation
is not very extensive, and it is also notated not very precisely. But I also have to say that
we may not forget of course that Cage did not publish his first pieces. So we cannot be
sure whether Cages intentions really have been so free, or if they only seem so because
he did not write down the specifications exactly.
–10–
Another example is In the Name of the Holocaust, written in 1942. Here it must be
mentioned that Cage demands special playing techniques besides the preparation itself,
plucking the strings, playing clusters with the arm or the flat hand.
Fig. 1:
In the Name of the Holocaust (1942)11
The two pieces for two prepared pianos, A Book Of Music (1944) and the Three Dances
(1945), can be indicated as a decisive event for Cage's composing. Both works are
dedicated to professional pianists, Robert Fizdale and Arthur Gold. So far, usually Cage
himself had played his piano works; of course he could play piano quite well, but it
really cannot be said that he was a virtuoso. Therefore his early works are not very
difficult to play.
–12–
Gradually Cage becomes established as a composer, and so his works now become
performed more often by professional musicians. His compositions become more
complex and more extensive. The largest and also most important work for prepared
piano, Cage writes in the years 1946 to 1948: the Sonatas & Interludes. In this work his
occupation with Indian culture finds its musical expression. In the year 1945 Cage did
11 All musical examples © by Henmar Press, New York. Published with permission from C. F.
Peters, Musikverlag, Frankfurt/M.
57
meet the Indian singer and tabla player Gita Sarabhai. She introduced him to the Indian
world of thoughts.
'After reading the work of Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, I decided to attempt the
expression in music of the “ permanent emotions” of Indian traditions: the heroic,
the erotic, the wondrous, the mirthful, sorrow, fear, anger, the odious and their
common tendency toward tranquility.' 12
Cage also got to know the Indian world of sounds, which mirrors these Indian emotions,
the so-called Rasas. It is the ever-floating character of Indian music, its resting in itself,
which we can find also in the Sonatas & Interludes. So with Indian music Cage widens
the horizon of his musical cosmos. But Cage did not only pick up Indian sounds for his
sound collection. Still more obvious is the tonal relationship with Javanese gamelan
music. Cage became acquainted with gamelan music through the lectures of Henry
Cowell, lectures on eastern music and folk music of various countries.
–13–
The preparation list of the Sonatas & Interludes is extremely detailed:
Fig. 2:
Preparation list of Sonatas & Interludes (1946-48)
The position of the materials is prescribed exactly at a sixteenth of an inch. And, for
example, Cage requires not less than five different kinds of bolts. Cage explained in
which way he determined the position of the materials:
12 John Cage, text published in CD-booklet „Sonatas & Interludes“ played by Maro Ajemian, New
York 1995 Composers Recordings Inc., CD 700.
58
'I placed objects on the strings, deciding their position according to the sounds
that resulted. Having those preparations of the piano and playing with them on
the keyboard in an improvisatory way, I found melodies and combinations of
sounds that worked with the given structure. Just as you go along the beach and
pick up pretty shells that please you, I go into the piano and find sounds I like.'13
So Cage here describes himself as a collector of sounds.
–14–
The apparent accuracy of the preparation is deceiving; Cage ignores that the strings of
different grand pianos have different dimensions. And what is the difference for
example between an ordinary bolt and a medium bolt? So besides all the accuracy, it is
above all the feeling for the sound which finally has to decide about the kind and
position of the materials.
'There are not only differences in screws or bolts but also in pianos (of the same
make and size). I would say then that using my table as a set of suggestions, chose
[sic] objects that do not become dislodged or in other ways stand out of the music.
You will often be able to tell whether your preparation is good or not if the
cadences "work".'14
The materials Cage uses are: wood, screws, bolts, nuts, plastic, rubber, coins, weather
stripping, bamboo or cloth.
–15–
In the year 1950 John Cage composes the Concerto for Prepared piano. This is the first
time he works with chance operations. At the same time the period of the prepared
piano comes to its end. Composing with chance and indeterminacy becomes the focus
of attention. This also characterises his last two works for prepared piano. In
31’57.9864’ ’ for a Pianist and 34’46.776’ ’ for a Pianist (both 1954) the materials are
determined only very vaguely.
13 Ibid.14 Ibid.
59
Fig. 3:
34’46.776’ ’ for a Pianist (1954)
–16–
For example, the “P” stands for plastic, but one can use glass or bone as well. The “x”
means that one can use any object. Also the position is not determined any longer. And,
in the course of the playing one has to change the position of the materials, to remove or
to add materials. So the sound result depends also on chance now.
–17–
Let us look back: In his first works for prepared piano Cage did need only few
materials, and the specifications about the position have been rather vague. The
selection of the materials became ever more complex up to the Sonatas & Interludes,
the specifications ever more exactly. In 31’57.9864 for a Pianist and 34’46.776’ ’ for a
Pianist the piano may become prepared finally with all imaginable materials. And as I
said, the position of the materials is changed in the course of the playing, materials are
added or removed. So the preparation becomes ever more extended in the course of the
years. And beyond it, Cage now also requires noises, produced by other freely chosen
means. This can be a whistle, but the shaking of a matchbox as well. As an example we
can take a look at the instrumentation of Water Walk: 'Employed here are roses in a
vase, a stove and a rubber fish, a quail call; [ ...] a goose whistle, a bath tub, an
exploding paper container, and a bottle of Campari.'15
15 David Revill, The Roaring Silence, p. 194.
60
–18–
Thus Cage extended his sound collection beginning in the first years with the pure,
unprepared instrument; then going on to the preparation with determined materials, later
then using undetermined materials. The next step is to use all imaginable objects which
can produce sounds. The last consequence of this sound extension is to integrate the
entire sound range of the environment into art. As Cage at the beginning of the thirties
already was fascinated by the sounds surrounding him on the road, he is ever more
fascinated by the coincidence of different sounds. For him, being surrounded by sounds
seems to have been an everlasting event – if we can trust his words:
'I love living on Sixth Avenue. [ ...] It has more sounds, and totally unpredictable
sounds, than any place I’ ve ever lived. The traffic never stops, night and day.
Every now and then a horn, siren, screeching brakes – extremely interesting and
always unpredictable.' (1978)16
–19–
Cage already experienced this way to perceive the environment when he met the painter
Mark Tobey in the Thirties.
'He would continually stop to notice something surprising everywhere – on the
side of a shack or in a space ... which we normally didn’ t notice when we were
walking, and his gaze would immediately turn them into a work of art.' 17
Consequently John Cage, the sound collector, pushed the borders of the musical horizon
ever more in the course of his life. And just the same he pushed the borders of the idea
of music as far as possible.
16 Ibid., p. 263.17 Ibid., p. 58.
61
W o r k s f o r p r ep ar ed p i a n o
Imaginary Landscape No. 1 (1939)
Percussion, muted piano, 2 record player (four performer)
Order number: 6716
Bacchanale (1940)
Order number: 6784, 67886a
Imaginary Landscape No. 2 (1940)
Percussion, records of various frequencies, prepared piano
Second Construction (1940)
Percussion quartet including prepared piano
Order number: 6791
Totem Ancestor (1942)
Order number: 6762
And The Earth Shall Bear Again (1942)
Order number: 6811, 67886a
Primitive (1942)
Order number: 66756, 67886a
In the Name of the Holocaust (1942)
Order number: 66755, 67886a
Shimmera (1942)
Four Dances (1942-43)
Prepared piano, percussion, voice
Order number: 67450
What We've So Proudly Hailed (1942-43)
Prepared piano, percussion, voice
Later published as: Four Dances
62
Lidice (1943)
Amores (1943)
Percussion (trios) and prepared piano
Order number: 6264
Our Spring Will Come (1943)
Order number: 66763, 67886a
She Is Asleep (1943)
Percussion, voice, piano or prepared piano
Order number: 6746, 6747
A Room (1943)
Piano or prepared piano
Order number: 6970, 67830
Meditation (1943)
First part identical to "Tossed As It Is Untroubled" (1943).
Tossed As It Is Untroubled (Meditation) (1943)
Order number: 6722, 67886a
Triple-Paced (1943)
Piano (1944 version for prepared piano)
The Perilous Night (1943-44)
Order number: 6741, 67886a
Prelude for Meditation (1944)
Order number: 6742, 67886b
Root of an Unfocus (1944)
Order number: 6743, 67886b
Spontaneous Earth (1944)
Order number: 66753, 67886b
63
The Unavailable Memory of (1944)
Order number: 66764, 67886b
A Valentine Out of Season (1944)
Order number: 6766, 67886b
A Book of Music (1944)
Two prepared pianos
Order number: 6702
Mysterious Adventure (1944-45)
Order number: 6787, 67886b
Three Dances (1944-45)
2 prepared pianos
Order number: 6760
Daughters of the Lonesome Isle (1945)
Order number: 6785, 67886b
Music for Marcel Duchamp (1947)
Order number: 6728, 67886b
Sonatas and Interludes (1946-48)
Order number: 6755
Music for "Works of Calder" (1949-50)
Prepared piano and recorded sounds
Concerto for Prepared Piano and Chamber Orchestra (1950-51)
Prepared piano and chamber orchestra
Order number: 6706
Two Pastorales (1951-52)
Prepared piano and two whistles
Order number: 6765
64
34'46.776" for a Pianist (1954)
Piano (with changing preparations)
Order number: 6781
31'57.9864" for a Pianist (1954)
Piano (with changing preparations)
Order number: 6780